With a new year upon us, we’re presented with a world of possibilities!

Each new year, people embark upon new goals and resolutions to better their lives. Sometimes, these new ambitions require an initial investment. Let Cash Fast help you take the first step! We’re here for when you need immediate cash.

Click Here To Learn More.

post its

Below is a recent article from TIME, featuring 10 Apps to help you stick to your New Year’s Resolutions in 2014.

According to scientists, we’re terrible at keeping New Year’s resolutions. Shocker, I know, kind of like that thing you’re always hearing bears do in the woods. “Willpower, like a bicep, can only exert itself so long before it gives out; it’s an extremely limited mental resource,” wrote Jonah Lehrer in a 2009 Wall Street Journal piece canvassing our cerebral proclivities — or lack thereof.

I can relate. I’ve never kept a New Year’s resolution much past that first week or two. What’s that Homer Simpson quote? “Kids, you tried your best and you failed miserably. The lesson is never try.” I’m not that despondent about annual self-betterment oaths, I just don’t think an arbitrary date’s the best way to recalibrate. Pick a date, any date, and if you’ve mentally girded yourself for the task ahead, it’ll do.

But okay, maybe your 2013 was long and arduous and you’re here looking for encouraging words, or how about just a round of encouraging apps to give you some 2014 guidance? Here’s a getcha-started rundown based on a Harris Poll of the 10 most common New Year’s resolutions, to help with your stab at post-festivities asceticism.

Addendum: Don’t try all or even a handful of these at once if you want to make headway. As Lehrer puts it, “Bad habits are hard to break—and they’re impossible to break if we try to break them all at once.” So before you throw stuff like triple-thick shakes and buckets of cheese-dipped fried chicken or smoking, binge shopping trips and piles of household bric-a-brac under the bus in a kind of self-improvement surfeit, maybe start with just one of the apps from the list below and give it the old college try. And if all else fails, remember what Oscar Wilde supposedly said: Everything in moderation — including moderation!

shutterstock_156012254Lose It!

The obligatory weight loss app of the bunch, this one’s available free for iOS and Android (as well as Nook, Kindle or any computer browser). It’s essentially a calorie tracker wrapped inside an elegant interface — its chief selling point, in my view — that includes category-based goal-making, customizable challenges, a food barcode scanner, optional social links for peer support and a mammoth backend database that includes “thousands of restaurant, grocery store, and brand-name foods.” The free version covers fitness essentials, but if you’re looking for more granularity, $40 a year gets you “premium“ extras, including support for additional health metrics and compatible fitness devices.

Mint

Get your personal finances in order (for iOS and Android), and note that “in order” can mean simply paying attention to what’s going on, which is where budget-only apps fall down. I’ve tinkered with all the major finance management apps over the years, from Microsoft Money and Quicken to online web one-offs and roll-my-own spreadsheets. Mint’s the best thing I’ve encountered, hands down. It’ll plug into any account — banking to credit cards to investments — auto-categorize transactions (though it sometimes needs a helping hand), and then auto-collate everything in easy-to-read graphs. It also lets you create any type of budget and — crucially — lets you disable access remotely with the click of a Mint.com account button, in the event you lose your device.

Runmeter

I’m a longtime runner, so with apologies, I’m going to bias the “exercise more” category slightly — I’d rather evangelize what I know than toss out something superficially all-encompassing. Runmeter’s selling point is its gorgeous interface and detailed cross-relational info screens, giving you everything you’d want (and more), from its real-time map to calories burned to pace-per-mile to elevation changes to historical aggregation — all in easy swiping distance. You’ll have to spend $5 a year to add trend analysis, check traffic or download additional voice types, and note that Runmeter is iOS-only, so if you’re looking for an Android alternative, my previous favorite was MapMyRun.

Job Search

Need a job? Want a new one? Job Search (free for iOS and Android) is the highest rated tool on Apple’s and Google’s app stores, letting you sort by relevance or date, GPS-related location as well as jobs that support applications directly from a mobile device.

Click Here To Read More.

Source: www.techland.time.com; Matt Peckham; December 31, 2013.